Director Mike Leigh looks for realism without a script

Mike Leigh
Mike Leigh says he has been driven by a quest to make people in movies look like real people. It's led him to develop a complicated improvisation system which can take months to complete, but has developed films which have drawn rave reviews and Oscar nominations
MPR photo/Euan Kerr

Mike Leigh admits he presents a challenge to the film industry, not least because of the way he works.

"I am the guy with no script, who won't tell you what the film is about and won't discuss casting," he said.

Driving lesson
The ever-sunny Poppy (Sally Hawkins) takes a driving lesson from Scott (Eddie Marsan) who turns out to have a very different worldview in 'Happy-Go-Lucky.'
Image courtesy Walker Art Center

Leigh jokes that he makes his films up as he goes along, but that belies a rigorous and multi-layered process which he has used to make 10 theatrical films and numerous TV shows so far.

When he says there's no script, he means it.

Leigh starts with an idea he would like to explore and then selects actors. He then works one on one with them, often for months to develop a character. He'll say how long it takes, but not much more.

"I never tell anybody about what's going on in my head at this stage - not even you."

"There's absolutely no way I can take you through that process, because it's nobody's business," he said. "It's a trade secret."

When all the characters are developed, he brings them together.

"A character doesn't exist in a vacuum," he said. "Obviously, a character develops by interaction with other characters."

And through those interactions, with Leigh's guidance, a story emerges.

There are times when Leigh has characters drop bombshells.

Leigh talks about how after weeks of work on "Vera Drake," he brought a group of actors dressed as police officers on the set to arrest the title character for performing back street abortions. None of the actors playing her family had any idea this was actually the central storyline of the film. Their reactions became part of a powerful scene in the movie.

Vera Drake
The scene in Mike Leigh's "Vera Drake" was improvides moments after actors who had been rehearsing scenes as part of her family learned the character had been doing illegal abortions.
Image courtesy Walker Art Center

Leigh says he's obsessed with stories about family dynamics. He's explored everything from adoption and inter-racial relationships, to the careers of Gilbert and Sullivan.

Leigh's latest film "Happy-Go-Lucky" started with his desire to work with actor Sally Hawkins, and there was something else.

"I wanted to make a kind of, what I call an 'anti-miserablist' film," he said.

What they ended up with is the story of Poppy, an inner city elementary school teacher. She's always happy, no matter the situation, whether it's in her classroom, out with friends, or at her first ever driving lesson with a grumpy instructor.

'Naked'
In Mike Leigh's film 'Naked' an apparently sociopathic man called Johnny (David Thewlis) cuts a swathe through a London neighborhood. While Johnny is very different from Poppy in "Happy-Go-Lucky" Leigh sees many parallels between the two, in part because they are so idealistic.
Image courtesy of the Walker Art Center

To be honest, Poppy is kind of annoying at first, with her incessant barrage of perky one-liners. But Leigh points out, as the story continues she shows a depth of character which makes her truly remarkable.

"We are living in terrible times, and there is a great deal to be gloomy about and to lament," said Leigh. "But there are people out there getting on with it, teachers not least, being positive. And Poppy is the embodiment of being fulfilled and sensible and mature and focused, but also having a great sense of fun and sense of humor and being altogether joyful as well as real." The film has won many awards on the film festival circuit around the world, including the Silver Bear at the Berlin Film Festival for best actress for Sally Hawkins

"Happy-Go-Lucky" opens nationwide this weekend, and the Leigh retrospective at the Walker runs through Saturday. Leigh calls the retrospective "good news."

"I gather this is unusual for various reasons, but I actually like my films," he grinned. "I make films and think if I don't like them, why the hell should I expect anyone else to really?"

Leigh says he hopes to make a new film next year, and its about?

"I never tell anybody about what's going on in my head at this stage - not even you," he laughed.

It was another Mike Leigh moment.